Abstract

Personality Disorders (PDs) are particularly hard to treat and treatment drop-out rates are high. Several authors have agreed that psychotherapy is more successful when it focuses on the core of personality pathology. For this reason, therapists dealing with PDs need to understand the psychopathological variables that characterize this pathology and exactly what contributes to maintaining psychopathological processes. Moreover, several authors have noted that one key problem that characterizes all PDs is an impairment in understanding mental states – here termed metacognition – which could also be responsible for therapy failures. Unfortunately, a limited number of studies have investigated the role of mentalization in the process of change during psychotherapy. In this paper, we assume that poor metacognition corresponds to a core element of the general pathology of personality, impacts a series of clinical variables, generates symptoms and interpersonal problems, and causes treatment to be slower and less effective. We explored whether changes in metacognition predicted an improvement among different psychopathological variables characterizing PDs; 193 outpatients were treated at the Third Center of Cognitive Psychotherapy in Rome, Italy, and followed a structured path tailored for the different psychopathological variables that emerged from a comprehensive psychodiagnostic assessment that considered patients’ symptoms, metacognitive abilities, interpersonal relationships, personality psychopathology, and global functioning. The measurements were repeated after a year of treatment. The results showed that changes in metacognitive abilities predicted improvements in the analyzed variables.

Highlights

  • Psychotherapists and psychiatrists agree that Personality Disorders (PDs) are troublesome to treat

  • We explored changes in metacognition and in a series of clinical variables in a sample of patients treated for 1 year with a treatment structured to improve metacognition

  • Turning to levels of metacognition, a significant improvement was observed from T0 to T1

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Summary

Introduction

Psychotherapists and psychiatrists agree that Personality Disorders (PDs) are troublesome to treat. McMurran et al (2010) discovered that the median dropout rate in PD patients was 37%, while in a recent study by Gamache et al (2018) the drop-out rate amounted to 40.8% These data suggest that it might be relevant to study the therapeutic process when treating PDs, since this would help to identify the main factors underlying personality pathology that might need to be addressed during treatment. Studies have generally investigated large sets of several pretreatment variables without focusing on specific variables selected for treatment prognosis prediction (Gamache et al, 2018) These observations call for a remarkable effort in analyzing the treatment process and understanding the possible mechanisms of change during psychotherapy

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